-
Resources
FreshDV @ PVC- Dymo DiscPainter Review
- Imagineer Offering up to 90% Discount to small shops One Day Only
- Should Politicians and VIPs get special DMCA exemptions?
- Building Good Hardware (is Harder Than it Looks)
- Interview with Ikonoskop about the A-cam dII Digital Cinema Camera
- Redrock Micro cinescreen ground glass upgrade cuts light loss
- S/N Ratios Demystified
- Audio Peak vs Average Levels: How our ears perceive loudness
- Can Ikonoskop?s DII Digital Cinema Camera Coexist with Red?
- Behind the Scenes at a superfad Phantom shoot
Interview Audio Editing Tips and Tricks
Published by Matthew Jeppsen August 4th, 2007 in Audio, Post-Production, TutorialsJay Rose has written a fantastic article for DV, he shares wonderful insight and tips for editing talking head interview audio. Here’s a quick excerpt:
“Glottal shocks are reserves of breath, stored in the lungs and released suddenly when a word starts with a vowel (like “andâ€? or “Iâ€?). These words should start smoothly, with the throat open before breath starts to flow. If breath starts too soon, the sudden burst of air makes a click. Scrub slowly through the start of the suspect word. The click will be definite, taking maybe a third of a frame where the word starts. Fixing it is easy. If you’re not concerned with lipsync, just cut it out. If the subject is visible and you don’t want to change the timing, replace it with an equal length of room tone. The subject will sound calmer.”
Most of the time we see tutorials aimed at the video side of things, it’s great to read a useful tutorial with relevant and practical info that can help improve your audio work. Definitely check this one out.
-
About FreshDV
-
Sponsors
-
Recent Comments
-
Fresh Links






No Responses to “Interview Audio Editing Tips and Tricks”
Please Wait
Leave a Reply